The Oakland Press

Loneliness is rampant. A simple call, or hug, may be a cure

Pandemic isolation damaging health, shortening lives

- By Lindsey Tanner and Martha Irvine

The stranger’s call came when Dianne Green needed it most.

Alone in the home where she’d raised four kids, grieving recently deceased relatives, too fearful of COVID-19 to see her grandkids and great-grandbabie­s, she had never felt lonelier.

Then, one day last spring, her cell phone lit up.

The cheerful voice on the line was Janine Blezien, a nurse from a Chicago hospital’s “friendly caller” program, created during the pandemic to help lonely seniors cope with isolation. Blezien, 57, lives with her rescue dogs, Gordy and Kasey, in a suburban brick bungalow, just six miles from Green’s two-flat apartment in the city.

“She wasn’t scripted. She seemed like she was genuinely caring,” said Green, 68, a retired dispatcher for the city’s water department. The two women started talking often and became friends without ever setting eyes on each other.

“I called her my angel.” Rampant loneliness existed long before COVID-19, and experts believe it’s now worse. Evidence suggests it can damage health and shorten lives as much as obesity and smoking. In addition to psychologi­cal distress, some studies suggest loneliness may cause physical changes including inflammati­on and elevated stress hormones that may tighten blood vessels and increase blood pressure.

Yet loneliness as a public health issue “has kind of been swept under the rug,” said Dr. Ada Stewart, president of the American Associatio­n of Family Physicians. There’s no formal

medical diagnosis and no mandate to screen for it.

“Now the pandemic has unveiled it,” Stewart said. “This is real.”

Just a month before a global pandemic was declared, a National Academies report showed that one-third of U.S. adults aged 45 and up were lonely. Surveys have surprising­ly found higher rates in younger adults.

A British online survey in 2018 of more than 55,000 people in 237 countries found that loneliness affected 40% of young adults, compared with 27% in those older than 75. Rates were highest in countries including the United States that prize individual success over collectivi­sm.

The true impact from the pandemic is yet to be seen.

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, who has called loneliness a public health crisis, points out that much of the world including the U.S. ‘‘was struggling with remarkably high levels of loneliness before COVID-19.’’

“The pandemic has shed new light on this struggle and reminded us of an unmistakab­le truth: we need each other,’’ he said in an emailed statement.

Facing troubling loneliness statistics, the United Kingdom in 2018 created a parliament position called the minister of loneliness, believed to be the world’s first. In February, after a rash of suicides, Japan appointed the second.

The UK’s current minister, Baroness Diana Barran, says the pandemic has kept her busier than ever.

“I have quite a wide portfolio of responsibi­lities, but I think I get probably 8 or 10 times as much correspond­ence on loneliness as I get on anything else,” she said.

Some of the solutions they’re trying: Mental health support via texting for young people, “garden gate” visits by volunteers offering social distanced conversati­on outside older folks’ homes, and a campaign encouragin­g people to wear yellow socks to highlight loneliness in teens and young adults.

Claire Muhlawako Madzura, a 16-year-old from Manchester, helped design the socks program. Madzura is Black and an only child; her family is originally from Zimbabwe. She said growing up in mostly white areas has made it hard for her to embrace her heritage and contribute­d to her loneliness.

Lockdowns made her realize how much she relied on school for socializin­g.

Using video calls to maintain friendship­s has been tough.

“Whenever I wear yellow socks now, I wear them proudly, because I know I’m not just representi­ng me, I’m representi­ng a massive group of people who’ve experience­d loneliness,” Madzura said.

Some doctors have gone as far as writing prescripti­ons for loneliness. There’s no recommende­d medicine, so they’ve gotten creative.

Evelyn Shaw’s physician knew the widowed grandmothe­r had been holed up in her New York City apartment, too frightened to venture out. She hadn’t seen her close-knit family in person for months.

So the doctor wrote her patient a prescripti­on that said simply: “You are allowed to hug your granddaugh­ter.”

The hug “was magical. It was surreal. We just held onto each and we cried,” Shaw said. Her daughter filmed the moment in a video that was posted on Twitter last month and went viral.

“We don’t want to live lonely and alone and terrified and afraid,” said Shaw, who along with her granddaugh­ter has gotten a COVID-19 vaccine. “We all want to be able to gather with the people we love and our friends. We want to go back to normalcy.”

 ?? MARTHA IRVINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dianne Green sits on the porch of her home in Chicago on Wednesday. Green, a retiree and cancer survivor, said she struggled with loneliness after several family members died in 2019and early 2020. Then the pandemic hit. She credits a “friendly caller” from Rush University Medical Center with pulling her out of the depths of despair.
MARTHA IRVINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dianne Green sits on the porch of her home in Chicago on Wednesday. Green, a retiree and cancer survivor, said she struggled with loneliness after several family members died in 2019and early 2020. Then the pandemic hit. She credits a “friendly caller” from Rush University Medical Center with pulling her out of the depths of despair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States